
The Czech Embassy in Amman has released its official consular and visa fee schedule for January 2026, reflecting new exchange rates and minor price adjustments. A short-stay (Schengen) visa now costs €90 or JOD 75, while a long-term visa or residence permit is pegged at CZK 2 500 (about JOD 86). Children aged 6–12 continue to benefit from a reduced €45 fee.
Consular services such as signature verification (CZK 500), super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) and passport issuance for adults (CZK 2 400) remain broadly in line with Prague’s global tariff but are recalculated into Jordanian dinars at the January reference rate of 1 EUR = 0.8317 JOD. The embassy will update the table again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar.
For applicants who would like a smoother experience, VisaHQ offers an online platform that keeps track of these Czech fee changes, supplies up-to-date checklists, and pre-screens documents before you head to the embassy—saving time and reducing the risk of rejection. Details can be found at https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/.
For mobility managers relocating staff from Jordan—or routing Middle-East assignees through Amman for biometrics—the published fees provide budgeting certainty at the start of the year. Companies should note that only cash in JOD is accepted at the cashier’s window and that super-legalised documents can still take up to seven working days. Applicants are advised to book appointments via the e-mail queue rather than walk-in, as capacity remains limited after the holiday period.
The embassy has reiterated that all emails received during the Christmas–New-Year closure have now been processed and that standard opening hours resumed on 3 January. Express slots are reserved for medical and humanitarian cases; business travellers should therefore submit requests at least four weeks ahead of travel.
Consular services such as signature verification (CZK 500), super-legalisation (CZK 1 200) and passport issuance for adults (CZK 2 400) remain broadly in line with Prague’s global tariff but are recalculated into Jordanian dinars at the January reference rate of 1 EUR = 0.8317 JOD. The embassy will update the table again if the koruna or euro move by more than five percent against the dinar.
For applicants who would like a smoother experience, VisaHQ offers an online platform that keeps track of these Czech fee changes, supplies up-to-date checklists, and pre-screens documents before you head to the embassy—saving time and reducing the risk of rejection. Details can be found at https://www.visahq.com/czech-republic/.
For mobility managers relocating staff from Jordan—or routing Middle-East assignees through Amman for biometrics—the published fees provide budgeting certainty at the start of the year. Companies should note that only cash in JOD is accepted at the cashier’s window and that super-legalised documents can still take up to seven working days. Applicants are advised to book appointments via the e-mail queue rather than walk-in, as capacity remains limited after the holiday period.
The embassy has reiterated that all emails received during the Christmas–New-Year closure have now been processed and that standard opening hours resumed on 3 January. Express slots are reserved for medical and humanitarian cases; business travellers should therefore submit requests at least four weeks ahead of travel.









